Release Notes: Taggle, a port of John Cowan's TagSoup package,
was added. Taggle parses HTML as found in the
wild, generating a well-formed stream of SAX
events. The Taggle interface is identical to
Arabica's XML parser, allowing HTML to be
processed with XML tools.

Release Notes: This is the first release that knowingly breaks existing code, but the changes required are all straightforward. There are several filename changes. Some classes have been moved into different namespaces. This release adds no new functionality.

Release Notes: This release includes the first release of Mangle,
the Arabica XSLT
engine. Still actively under development, mangle
passes about 85% of the
OASIS XSLT conformance test suite and covers most
common cases. There
are additional incremental improvements to the
build system.

Release Notes: Further improvements were made to the configure system. The build can now be configured without the Boost libraries, in which case the XPath components are skipped. Parser detection is improved, as is detecting the correct libraries for sockets. TreeWalker and NodeFilter were added. MSXML version checking was beefed up. Buffering in convertstream was reworked to reduce the number of dynamic allocations. LexicalHandler and DeclHandler are promoted to be part of the XMLReader interface.

Release Notes: This release further improves the configuration options, allowing easier selection of the underlying XML parser library. The Visual Studio 2003 solution and project files have been properly updated so that all the tests and examples are built. Compiling Arabica against MSXML also works correctly again. This release introduces no other new functionality.

Release Notes: Incremental improvements to the build system. Most significantly, it is now possible to configure the build without the Boost library, in which case those components that need Boost are skipped.

Release Notes: This release uses GNU Autotools, significantly simplifying the build process. Other than the changes to the source code layout and build system, this release contains no new features or bugfixes.

Release Notes: This release extends the XPath engine to support arbitrary strings types. It now runs std::string and std::wstring out of the box. A new dual DOM/Streaming parser has been added. By registering a callback function, partially built DOM trees can be processed, modified, manipulated, or even discarded before proceeding to build more of the tree. The test suite has been extended to include std::string, std::wstring, and a custom string type. The release also includes assorted minor bugfixes.